WO1989006709A1 - Method of sputtering - Google Patents

Method of sputtering Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1989006709A1
WO1989006709A1 PCT/US1988/000948 US8800948W WO8906709A1 WO 1989006709 A1 WO1989006709 A1 WO 1989006709A1 US 8800948 W US8800948 W US 8800948W WO 8906709 A1 WO8906709 A1 WO 8906709A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
target
spherical
substrate
plasma
substrates
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1988/000948
Other languages
English (en)
French (fr)
Inventor
Gottfried K. Wehner
Original Assignee
Wehner Gottfried K
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Wehner Gottfried K filed Critical Wehner Gottfried K
Priority to KR1019890701732A priority Critical patent/KR900700652A/ko
Priority to AT89900684T priority patent/ATE92113T1/de
Priority to JP1500479A priority patent/JPH0776422B2/ja
Publication of WO1989006709A1 publication Critical patent/WO1989006709A1/en

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C14/00Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material
    • C23C14/22Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material characterised by the process of coating
    • C23C14/34Sputtering
    • C23C14/3407Cathode assembly for sputtering apparatus, e.g. Target
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C14/00Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material
    • C23C14/22Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material characterised by the process of coating
    • C23C14/34Sputtering
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C14/00Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material
    • C23C14/22Coating by vacuum evaporation, by sputtering or by ion implantation of the coating forming material characterised by the process of coating
    • C23C14/34Sputtering
    • C23C14/3407Cathode assembly for sputtering apparatus, e.g. Target
    • C23C14/3414Metallurgical or chemical aspects of target preparation, e.g. casting, powder metallurgy
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10NELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10N60/00Superconducting devices
    • H10N60/01Manufacture or treatment
    • H10N60/0268Manufacture or treatment of devices comprising copper oxide
    • H10N60/0296Processes for depositing or forming copper oxide superconductor layers
    • H10N60/0408Processes for depositing or forming copper oxide superconductor layers by sputtering
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10NELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10N60/00Superconducting devices
    • H10N60/01Manufacture or treatment
    • H10N60/0268Manufacture or treatment of devices comprising copper oxide
    • H10N60/0661Processes performed after copper oxide formation, e.g. patterning

Definitions

  • the present invention pertains to sputtering by ion bombardment, deposition of multicomponent films, such as alloy or compound films consisting of two or more elements from the periodic table, and the substrate-target geometry in sputter deposition of a coating. More particularly, the present invention concerns a method for sputter deposition of films or coatings over large areas or at widely different substrate locations relative to the target where the coating is of exactly the same solid component composition as the target from where the material is being sputtered.
  • the present invention overcomes the disadvantages of the prior art by not sputtering from a flat, but from at least one spherical or partially spherical target positioned in a uniform plasma of a triode or diode gas- or vapor-discharge or in a plasma which is created with radio frequency- or microwave-excitation.
  • the general purpose of the present invention is the use of a spherical target where the conservation of mass law, together with the spherical symmetry of the target, guarantees that the composition of solids in the deposit is the same as in the target, regardless of where the substrate (within limits) is located. Even if such additional effects, such as evaporation or resputtering from the substrate, or poor sticking of a component becomes involved, the conservation of matter in a spherical-closed system requires that the composition remains unchanged from that of the target, no matter with what ion energy it is sputtered. With a new target, it will require some short presputtering for establishing equilibrium conditions.
  • the surface composition at the target then adjusts automatically to become different from that of the bulk in order to achieve the material removal with unchanged composition. It will, of course, be necessary to keep the target temperature below the value where constituents begin to move in the bulk and diffuse to the surface for replenishing the species which is most easily sputtered from there.
  • the present invention becomes less useful in a pressure regime where the mean free path of sputtered atoms becomes very short compared to the travel distance between target and substrate.
  • the collisions between sputtered atoms and gas or vapor atoms then make the ejection direction from the target immaterial.
  • many considerations exist for operating in the low gas pressure regime 10 ⁇ 3 Torr with mean free paths of the sputtered atoms of several centimeters or larger) such as for retaining the high kinetic energy of sputtered atoms, or preventing the back diffusion of sputtered atoms to the target which lowers the deposition rate, or providing better adherence of those coatings.
  • Sputtering from a sphere at low gas pressure instead of from a flat target creates another very significant difference, namely with respect to the energies of the impinging atoms because they come not only from normal but as well from obliquely ejected atoms which are known to have higher ejection energies. This improves not only film adherence, compound formation, nucleation, and surface movements of atoms which in turn are beneficial for epitaxy at low substrate temperature.
  • oxygen-containing targets or in plasmas or targets which contain other electronegative species one has to deal with another problem which is related to the fact that many of these atoms are sputtered in the form of negative ions.
  • the spherical target will even solve problems which arise when a single element target is sputtered in an electronegative gas plasma for producing two component coatings such as metal oxides.
  • the bombarding positive oxygen ions are on impact partly converted into negative ions which again form in the case of a flat target a beam normal to the target surface, which is undesirable because they cause resputtering of material from the substrate.
  • those ions are however accelerated in radial directions and are therefore much diluted.
  • the present invention is particularly useful for the recently discovered ceramic high Tc superconductor materials.
  • Superconducting compounds such as NbSn, NbTi, NbGe etc., i.e., other than the new ceramic high Tc materials.
  • Semiconductor films such as GaAs, AlGaAs, HgCdTe, etc.
  • Intermetallic compounds for improved corrosion, and wear resistance and greater hardness such as PtCr at the cutting edges of razor blades.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates prior art of sputtering from a flat target
  • FIG. 2 illustrates the present invention of sputtering from a large spherical target to a substrate
  • FIG. 3 illustrates the present invention of sputtering from a small spherical target to a substrate
  • FIG. 4 illustrates a resistivity versus absolute temperature graph of a sputter-deposited superconductor film from a 123 target.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates an electrically conducting target sphere held in position and connected to the negative pole of the DC-, or in the case of insulator coatings on a metal sphere, to an RF-sputter power supply.
  • the allowed substrate positions are limited to those not in line of sight with the sphere area where the connection is made.
  • the connecting lead to the sphere needs, of course, to be insulated from the plasma so that it would not be subject to sputtering.
  • the sphere can be made of the material to be sputtered or can be a metal sphere which is coated with a sufficiently thick layer of the material to be sputtered.
  • the distance between sphere and substrate and the sphere size have no influence on the composition, but both affect the deposition rate.
  • the relationship of the target sphere to the substrate must be such that sputtered atoms reach the substrate over the ejection angle range from -90° through 0 to +90°.
  • the only portion of a sphere that is required is that which provides such an ejection angle range over all parts of the substrate. If one tries to achieve high uniformity of the deposition rate over a flat surface, one should use a small target sphere and a large substrate distance like shown in FIG. 3, but then the deposition rate will become very small. If one uses the case of FIG. 2 with the substrate closer to a large target sphere, it may not only become difficult to fill the space between substrate and target with a dense uniform plasma, but the deposition rate on a flat target becomes more non-uniform unless one uses mechanical motions.
  • Sputtering of insulators can only be accomplished with RF power applied to a metal sphere which has the insulating material to be sputtered affixed to the outer surface of the sphere.
  • compositions of the deposits sputtered from spherical targets are maintained independent of substrate positions (within the limits as discussed) , and independent of the distance between target and substrate, makes it possible to use more than one plasma-immersed spherical target, in particular in the case that the substrate-target distances are much larger than the target spheres.
  • three such spherical targets are arranged in a triangular configuration pointing towards a substrate located in a direction normal to the center of the triangle.
  • Spherical targets can also be arranged in a row for creating a "line source” of sputtered material, such as is usually used with "race track” magnetron sputtering sources for coating large glass panels which are transported continuously across the line source sputtering target.
  • the targets can be arranged in a circle, and a wire or rod to be sputter coated is drawn continuously through the center of the circle.
  • many spherical targets can be positioned in a triangular matrix fashion, or even in a three dimensional configuration, for achieving high deposition rate and high uniformity in thickness over large flat areas.
  • the immediate impact of the present invention is in the film deposition of the Y 1 Ba2Cu 3 0 7 _ ⁇ (referred to as
  • the graph of FIG. 4 illustrates the results.
  • the present invention was experimentally proven in a mercury triode plasma with the electrons supplied from a cathode spot ignited on a Hg pool.
  • the reason for this plasma was the fact that this equipment was in place and operational, and that the inventor has a long experience in this equipment. The same results will no doubt be obtained in a noble gas triode discharge.
  • the specifics of one example (with the results shown in FIG. 4) of the present invention are as follows:
  • the target hemisphere had 4mm radius.
  • the substrate was a 5x6xlmm SrTi0 3 crystal mounted about 4cm away from the target.
  • the main discharge current between cathode #22 and anode #30 was 4 amp with a voltage drop between anode and cathode of 25 volt.
  • the lower part of the Pyrex tube was immersed in water which was chilled to 11°C which sets the vapor pressure of Hg at about 5xl0 ⁇ 4 Torr.
  • the tube was pumped with a 12L/sec Hg diffusion pump.
  • the target voltage was 300 volt negative w.r.t.
  • the floating voltage in this low pressure, very non-thermal, plasma was minus 17 volt w.r.t. anode which of course helps to sputter-clean the insulating substrate before sputter deposition is started.
  • the thickness of the deposited film was 7000 A and this was obtained in about 11 hours of sputtering.
  • Fig. 4 shows that the whole resistance curve from 300 ⁇ K to 92 ⁇ K curves downward, which differs from most other published data.
  • the T (10% to 90%) is still rather high. Full superconductivity is reached at 76°K.
  • the sample is an insulator after deposition, and requires the usual oxygen annealing procedure for incorporating the right amount of oxygen. The procedure was: 650°C for 90 in, 750°C for 30 in, 850"C for 20 min and 920°C for 3.5 min with subsequent slow cooling in oxygen to room temperature.
  • These films always need such a high temperature heat treatment after deposition for accomplishing the 0 7 _ ⁇ (x 1) composition and for converting the material to the orthorhombic structure.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Physical Vapour Deposition (AREA)
  • Superconductors And Manufacturing Methods Therefor (AREA)
  • Vaporization, Distillation, Condensation, Sublimation, And Cold Traps (AREA)
  • Photoreceptors In Electrophotography (AREA)
  • Crystals, And After-Treatments Of Crystals (AREA)
PCT/US1988/000948 1988-01-21 1988-03-24 Method of sputtering WO1989006709A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
KR1019890701732A KR900700652A (ko) 1988-01-21 1988-03-24 증착 방법
AT89900684T ATE92113T1 (de) 1988-01-21 1988-03-24 Verfahren fuer dampfniederschlag.
JP1500479A JPH0776422B2 (ja) 1988-01-21 1988-03-24 スパッタリング方法及び装置

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US14630088A 1988-01-21 1988-01-21
US146,300 1988-01-21

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1989006709A1 true WO1989006709A1 (en) 1989-07-27

Family

ID=22516749

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1988/000948 WO1989006709A1 (en) 1988-01-21 1988-03-24 Method of sputtering

Country Status (7)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0352308B1 (ko)
JP (1) JPH0776422B2 (ko)
KR (1) KR900700652A (ko)
AT (1) ATE92113T1 (ko)
AU (1) AU2826089A (ko)
DE (1) DE3882704T2 (ko)
WO (1) WO1989006709A1 (ko)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0753600A1 (en) * 1995-07-14 1997-01-15 Nihon Shinku Gijutsu Kabushiki Kaisha Small size sputtering target and high vacuum sputtering apparatus using the same
CN105671509A (zh) * 2016-03-31 2016-06-15 成都西沃克真空科技有限公司 一种球面靶阴极机构及溅射镀膜装置

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3988232A (en) * 1974-06-25 1976-10-26 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Method of making crystal films

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3021271A (en) * 1959-04-27 1962-02-13 Gen Mills Inc Growth of solid layers on substrates which are kept under ion bombardment before and during deposition

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3988232A (en) * 1974-06-25 1976-10-26 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Method of making crystal films

Non-Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, Volume 26, Number 5, issued May 1987, H. ADACHI et al "Preparation and Characterization of Superconducting Y-Ba-Cu-O Thin Films", pp l709-l710 (see entire Article) *
Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, Volume 26, Number 5, issued May 1987, M. KAWASAKI et al, "High Tc Yb-Ba-Cu-O Thin Films Deposited on Sintered YSZ Substrates by Sputtering", pp l738-l740 (see entire Article) *
Nature, Vol. 326, issued 30 April 1987, R.E. SOMEKH et al, "High Superconducting Transition Temperatures in Sputter-Deposited YBaCuO Thin Films, pp 857-859 (see entire Article) *

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0753600A1 (en) * 1995-07-14 1997-01-15 Nihon Shinku Gijutsu Kabushiki Kaisha Small size sputtering target and high vacuum sputtering apparatus using the same
CN105671509A (zh) * 2016-03-31 2016-06-15 成都西沃克真空科技有限公司 一种球面靶阴极机构及溅射镀膜装置

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JPH02501754A (ja) 1990-06-14
ATE92113T1 (de) 1993-08-15
EP0352308B1 (en) 1993-07-28
AU2826089A (en) 1989-08-11
EP0352308A4 (en) 1990-06-27
EP0352308A1 (en) 1990-01-31
DE3882704D1 (de) 1993-09-02
DE3882704T2 (de) 1994-01-13
JPH0776422B2 (ja) 1995-08-16
KR900700652A (ko) 1990-08-16

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